Julian Cribb Explained

Julian Cribb
Honorific Suffix:AM FTSE
Occupation:Science writer, author, activist
Language:English
Alma Mater:University of Western Australia
Children:Alex, Jasmine, Olivia
Nationality:United Kingdom, Australia
Genre:Non-fiction
Subject:science, agriculture, food, mining, energy, the environment
Website:juliancribb.net

Julian Cribb is a British-Australian author and science writer, known for his extensive contributions in the fields of science, agriculture, food, mining, energy, and the environment. Cribb worked in various editorial roles, advisory positions, and leadership roles in professional bodies. He is known for his prolific output, including over 12 books and more than 9000 articles. His literary focus primarily revolves around addressing existential risks to humanity, with notable works such as "The Coming Famine," "Surviving the 21st Century," "Food or War," and "How to Fix a Broken Planet."[1] [2]

Early life and education

Cribb grew up in the UK was educated at Radley College.[3]

Career

Journalism

In 1966,[4] he migrated to Australia and started working as a reporter to a local newspaper.[5]

Cribb edited six newspapers and magazines, and received over thirty journalism awards. He moved to science communication and became the director of national awareness for the Australian national scientific organisation, CSIRO.

Advocacy

Cribb is an outspoken advocate for adopting global solutions to the ten megathreats described in his books, in ways that make none of them worse. He argues these threats constitute the greatest existential emergency humans have ever faced in their million years on the planet. Attempting to solve these threats one at a time will not work, he warns.

In his books, Cribb also calls for:

  1. a stewards of the earth program to rewild and repair damaged natural ecosystems globally;
  2. a new human right not to be poisoned;
  3. an earth standard currency;
  4. a global truth commission;
  5. the right of all humans to inhabit a non-poisoned world; and
  6. a world plan to save humanity.

In a 2018 interview to Vision.org, Cribb said that humanity faces multiple existential threats, which require holistic solutions rather than isolated fixes. He advocated for collective action, stressing the importance of political engagement and consumer choices in shaping global outcomes. Cribb stressed the disproportionate investment in warfare over essential needs like food security and urged a shift towards prioritizing peace and sustainability. Calling for a reevaluation of societal beliefs and values, Cribb urged the exercise of both wisdom and foresight in addressing looming crises.[6]

During the same year, Cribb gave an interview to Nora Young for her show Spark on CBC Radio One. Cribb discussed the centralized nature of the global food distribution system and highlighted how a few corporations control the food trade. He described the detrimental effects of this centralization, including poor diets, vulnerable food chains, and environmental degradation caused by unsustainable farming practices. Cribb also talked about food waste at various stages of the supply chain, from transportation to consumer habits, pointing out the inefficiencies and lost nutrients. He also outlined his vision for a sustainable food system, which includes regenerative farming, urban food production,[7] and deep ocean aquaculture.

Council for the Human Future

In 2019 he co-founded the Council for the Human Future to raise global awareness of the growing existential crisis, comprising ten catastrophic risks, and help devise solutions to them all. He is a strong proponent of an Earth System Treaty,[8] a universal agreement by all of humanity to act to save both our civilization and the world that sustains it.

Bibliography

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Julian Cribb AM FRSA FTSE .
  2. Web site: 2020-05-18 . Julian Cribb - Surviving the 21st Century - Unstress with Dr Ron Ehrlich . en-AU.
  3. Web site: Sustaining a Future . www.abc.net.au.
  4. Web site: 2017-03-22 . About . Surviving C21 . en.
  5. Web site: Canberra Conversations Julian Cribb - ABC Canberra - Australian Broadcasting Corporation . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111030203158/https://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2011/10/26/3348274.htm . 30 October 2011.
  6. Web site: Interview: Humanity’s End Game . www.vision.org . en.
  7. Web site: Industrialized food production is 'a very foolish system', says author .
  8. Web site: Frey . Dr Sibylle . 2023-08-24 . Why We Need an Earth System Treaty-A MAHB Dialogue with Julian Cribb, Council for the Human Future . MAHB . en-US.